- drop the notion of frags (LFS fragments) vs fsb (FFS fragments)
The code uses a complicated unity function that just makes the
code difficult to understand.
- support larger sector sizes. Fix disk address computations
to use DEV_BSIZE in the kernel as required by device drivers
and to use sector sizes in userland.
- Fix several locking bugs in lfs_bio.c and lfs_subr.c.
a struct called kernelops, which contains standard system calls
for the normal case and rump system calls for the rump case.
Make it possible to run the lfs cleaner in a library fashion (taking
the quick route with the implementation).
PR kern/16942 panic with softdep and quotas
PR kern/19565 panic: softdep_write_inodeblock: indirect pointer #1 mismatch
PR kern/26274 softdep panic: allocdirect_merge: ...
PR kern/26374 Long delay before non-root users can write to softdep partitions
PR kern/28621 1.6.x "vp != NULL" panic in ffs_softdep.c:4653 while unmounting a softdep (+quota) filesystem
PR kern/29513 FFS+Softdep panic with unfsck-able file-corruption
PR kern/31544 The ffs softdep code appears to fail to write dirty bits to disk
PR kern/31981 stopping scsi disk can cause panic (softdep)
PR kern/32116 kernel panic in softdep (assertion failure)
PR kern/32532 softdep_trackbufs deadlock
PR kern/37191 softdep: locking against myself
PR kern/40474 Kernel panic after remounting raid root with softdep
Retire softdep, pass 2. As discussed and later formally announced on the
mailing lists.
run through copy-on-write. Call fscow_run() with valid data where possible.
The LP_UFSCOW hack is no longer needed to protect ffs_copyonwrite() against
endless recursion.
- Add a flag B_MODIFY to bread(), breada() and breadn(). If set the caller
intends to modify the buffer returned.
- Always run copy-on-write on buffers returned from ffs_balloc().
- Add new function ffs_getblk() that gets a buffer, assigns a new blkno,
may clear the buffer and runs copy-on-write. Process possible errors
from getblk() or fscow_run(). Part of PR kern/38664.
Welcome to 4.99.63
Reviewed by: YAMAMOTO Takashi <yamt@netbsd.org>
systems just checked != 0, breaking MNT_GETARGS. Others worked with < 0,
but make them check against -1 too for consistency. And sprinkle some
stylish line wrapping where appropriate.
* Add lfs_balloc capability to the lfs library.
* Extend the Ifile if we run out of free inodes when creating lost+found.
* Don't roll forward if we have allocated a lost+found, to avoid
conflicts when adding new files in roll-forward.
* Make some messages slightly more verbose (e.g. include inode number,
and use pwarn() instead of printf() so the messages include the device
name when preening).
* Change superblock detection/avoidance to use the offset table in the
primary superblock, rather than looking at the contents.
* Be more verbose about various operations when passed the -d flag,
especially roll-forward.
* Be more careful about dirops during roll forward, since the cleaner can
sometimes write blocks from dirop vnodes. Detect and avoid this problem.
* Always check the free list, even if given -i; if we're going to write
it we have to check it first.
* Mark inodes dirty when blocks are found during roll forward, so the
inodes are written with the new block locations.
* Update size of inodes if blocks beyond EOF are found during roll
forward.
* Fix segment accounting for blocks and inodes found during roll
forward.
* Report statistics on roll forward: how many new/deleted/moved files
and how many updated blocks (or "nothing new").
* Don't care if the device being checked is really a device, if we have
been passed the -f flag (to facilitate automated testing).
* When writing to the disk, use the current time in the segment headers
rathern than time 0.
* When passed the -i flag, locate the partial segment containing the
Ifile inode and use that to calculate lfs_offset, lfs_curseg,
lfs_nextseg. (Again for automated testing.)
the list in order (ordering it on mount).
Regularize error messages: these are now all in ALL CAPS, with all hex
numbers (not reported in caps) prefixed by 0x. (The non-fsck-specific
messages are an exception to this all-caps rule.)
- Remove all NFS related stuff from file system specific code.
- Drop the vfs_checkexp hook and generalize it in the new nfs_check_export
function, thus removing redundancy from all file systems.
- Move all NFS export-related stuff from kern/vfs_subr.c to the new
file sys/nfs/nfs_export.c. The former was becoming large and its code
is always compiled, regardless of the build options. Using the latter,
the code is only compiled in when NFSSERVER is enabled. While doing this,
also make some functions in nfs_subs.c conditional to NFSSERVER.
- Add a new command in nfssvc(2), called NFSSVC_SETEXPORTSLIST, that takes a
path and a set of export entries. At the moment it can only clear the
exports list or append entries, one by one, but it is done in a way that
allows setting the whole set of entries atomically in the future (see the
comment in mountd_set_exports_list or in doc/TODO).
- Change mountd(8) to use the nfssvc(2) system call instead of mount(2) so
that it becomes file system agnostic. In fact, all this whole thing was
done to remove a 'XXX' block from this utility!
- Change the mount*, newfs and fsck* userland utilities to not deal with NFS
exports initialization; done internally by the kernel when initializing
the NFS support for each file system.
- Implement an interface for VFS (called VFS hooks) so that several kernel
subsystems can run arbitrary code upon receipt of specific VFS events.
At the moment, this only provides support for unmount and is used to
destroy NFS exports lists from the file systems being unmounted, though it
has room for extension.
Thanks go to yamt@, chs@, thorpej@, wrstuden@ and others for their comments
and advice in the development of this patch.